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entry March 2005
New
Construction on via Marina
One
of the most blighted areas of Naples for many decades has been along
via Marina, the east-west road that runs the length of the port of
Naples from the passenger terminals in front of Piazza Municipio and
the Maschio Angioino (Angevin Fortress)
for about a mile and a half all
the way to the industrial port at the other end.
Along its length, via Marina passes (at
about the half-way point) the historic Carmine Church and the adjacent Piazza Mercato (Market Square),
both of which for many centuries were
central to the social and commercial life of the city.
There are two main reasons for the overall degraded condition of that
section of Naples. To take the most recent reason first, the
approximately 150 Allied air-raids
on Naples in WW 2 (until the
Anglo-American expeditionary force came up from the invasion at Salerno
to drive the Germans out in September of 1943) did considerable damage
to the port, the adjacent industrial plants, and the nearby train
station and rail lines. Naples was very important to the Axis war
effort and, thus, was the most heavily bombed Italian city in the
war. What the Allies didn't destroy, fell victim to a
devastating "scorched earth" policy of the Germans when they abandoned
the city to flee north towards Cassino. The industrial port was rebuilt
and is once again a full and functioning commercial facility, but
wartime damage is still evident in sections along via Marina in the
sense that the rubble is gone but not much has taken its place.
The second reason for
the decay is not
that evident to the casual observer. Via Marina, itself, is a
relatively recent invention. It was part of the massive rebuilding of
Naples known as the "Risanamento," a
decades-long construction project
begun in the 1880s to rebuild the city (to "make it healthy again," as
the term "risanamento" implies). The point was to build a modern
port-side road to facilitate traffic out of the city towards the towns
to the east and south. In order to do that, what was left of the
Spanish wall to the city along the port was demolished, including the
Carmine Castle directly across from Piazza Mercato. So far, so good.
But
another main road, Corso Umberto, was also built--a broad and straight
boulevard that connected the areas of the City Hall and the Stock
Exchange to the train station over a mile away. It runs parallel to via
Marina, but a couple of blocks inland. The new Corso Umberto was so
successful that it essentially shifted the commercial center of the
center away from Piazza Mercato, cutting it off, as it were. That
section of Naples--between the port road and the other new road--then
went into a decades-long decline many, many years before the ravages of
the Second World War.
That
is changing. Today, if you start at the passenger terminals at the west
end of the port and walk or drive east along via Marina, the immediate
impression is of new buildings and ongoing construction picking its way
east, bit by bit, to fill in the holes left by over a century of decay.
There are new office buildings, banks, and even two new university
buildings. Much of this has taken place over the last 10 years. It is
now fair to say that at least the first section of via Marina, from the
passenger terminals to Piazza Mercato, has had a solid make-over. As is
usual in all Neapolitan architecture, you get a mish-mash. Some of it I
like, some I don't, but
it is all better than what was there before.
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